Daisy's brides say they live a perfect life in Syria: VIDEO Their children eat weeds to survive

Sky News's filmmakers, visiting the area destroyed by fighting, found that while Daesh & # 39; s lost part of its territory, the fanatic ideology of its followers did not deteriorate.

"You have a face as an outside sole." one of the women said the worst offense. , as she recalled, the address of Sky News editor John Sparks. And she said, "Thanks, Daesh has the laws that God is, and when he helps people, it's free. (19659005) When children eat weeds

However, many women said that it is not so perfect not, and they add it with a small amount of food – including children – was forced to eat weeds and coarse bread to survive. It was difficult to escape somewhere, we were hungry and we bombarded, we were cold, chorelic children. "

She has a comfortable tent.

At least a thousand foreigners, including at least 14 Britons who are suspected of being members of Daes. , detained in Syria in prisons and camps in Northern Syria after arresting the Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). In the al-Hawl camp in Deir ez-Zor, there are over 39,000 people in the area of ​​electricity, food and water. The International Rescue Council said last week that 51 people, mostly children, had died in recent weeks due to cold weather, malnutrition and lack of medical care.

However, the bride of Daes Shamim Begum (19) praised her having had a better tent, but among other things the bride told her how the British teenage girl was driving in the all-Hawl camp. Nothing nice. And the other women wanted to burn them in the tent where he lived with the weekly son of Jerah.

Begum, who was refused British citizenship last week, said she really regretted that she had left a 15-year-old from East London and joined Daes. Her family has fallen since she learned that Shamima is in the camp. The father condemned her for her deed, saying he was "on the side of the government" and that he also banned him from entering the country. "I know she stuck there, but it did herself through her own behavior. It's right or not, but if the law says it's right to abolish its citizenship, then I agree. [19659003] "

Shamima, who is married to the prisoner, Dutch terrorist Jagom Riedijok in Syria, insists that the British authorities" she admits she never planned to return to Britain, but if she "A little like Daes" became a poster girl, she felt she was discriminated against . " I'm an example of being punished because I'm known. "